1. Nike

Hack first heard about Jennifer Government at the water cooler. He was only
there because the one on his floor was out; Legal was going to come down on Nature’s
Springs like a ton of shit, you could bet on that. Hack was a Merchandise Distribution
Officer. This meant when Nike made up a bunch of posters, or caps, or beach towels, Hack
had to send them to the right place. Also, if someone called up complaining about missing
posters, or caps, or beach towels, Hack had to take the call. It wasn’t as exciting
as it used to be.

“It’s a calamity,” a man at the water cooler said.
“Four days away from launch and Jennifer Government’s all over my ass.”

“Jee-sus,” his companion said. “That’s gotta
suck.”

“It means we have to move fast.” He looked at Hack, who was
filling his cup. “Hi there.”

Hack looked up. They were smiling at him as if he was an equal—but of
course, Hack was on the wrong floor. They didn’t know he was just a Merc Officer.
“Hi.”

“Haven’t seen you around before,” the calamity guy
said. “You new?”

“No, I work in Merc.”

“Oh.” His nose wrinkled.

“Our cooler’s out,” Hack said. He turned away quickly.

“Hey, wait up,” the suit said. “You ever do any marketing
work?”

“Uh,” he said, not sure if this was a joke. “No.”

The suits looked at each other. The calamity guy shrugged. Then they
stuck out their hands. “I’m John Nike, Guerrilla Marketing Operative, New
Products.”

“And I'm John Nike, Guerrilla Marketing Vice-President, New
Products,” the other suit said.

“Hack Nike,” Hack said, shaking.

“Hack, I’m empowered to make mid-range labor-contracting
decisions,” Vice-President John said. “You interested in some work?”

“Some...” He felt his throat thicken. “Marketing work?”

“On a case-by-case basis, of course,” the other John said.

Hack started to cry.

“There,” a John said, handing him a handkerchief. “You feel
better?”

Hack nodded, shamed. “I’m sorry.”

“Hey, don’t worry about it,” Vice-President John said.
“Career change can be very stressful. I read that somewhere.”

“Here’s the paperwork.” The other John handed him a pen and
a sheaf of papers. The first page said CONTRACT TO PERFORM
SERVICE, and the others were in type too small to read.

Hack hesitated. “You want me to sign this now?”

“It’s nothing to worry about. Just the usual non-competes and
non-disclosure agreements.”

“Yeah, but...” Companies were getting a lot tougher on labor
contracts these days; Hack had heard stories. At Adidas, if you quit your job and your
replacement wasn’t as competent, they sued you for lost profits.

“Hack, we need someone who can make snap decisions. A fast
mover.”

“Someone who can get things done. With a minimum of screwing
around.”

“If that’s not your style, well... let’s forget we spoke. No
harm done. You stick to Merchandising.” Vice-President John reached for the contract.

“I can sign it now,” Hack said, tightening his grip.

“It’s totally up to you,” the other John said, taking the
chair beside Hack. He crossed his legs and rested his hands at the juncture, smiling. Both
Johns had good smiles, Hack noticed. He guessed everyone in marketing did. They had pretty
similar faces, too. “Just at the bottom there.”

Hack signed.

“Also there,” the John said. “And on the next page... and
one there. And there.”

“Glad to have you on board, Hack.” Vice-President John took the
contract, opened a drawer, and dropped it inside. “Now. What do you know about Nike
Mercurys?”

The Johns smiled. “We started selling Mercurys six months ago. You
know how many pairs we’ve shifted since then?”

Hack shook his head. They cost thousands of dollars a pair, but that
wouldn’t stop people from buying them. They were the hottest sneakers in the world.
“A million?”

“Two hundred.”

“Two hundred million?”

“No, two hundred pairs.”

“John here,” the other John said, “pioneered the concept of
marketing by refusing to sell any products. It drives the market insane.”

“And now it’s time to cash in. On Friday we’re gonna dump
four hundred thousand pairs on the market at two and a half grand each.”

“Which, since they cost us—what was it?”

“Eighty-five.”

“Since they cost us eighty-five cents to manufacture, gives us a gross
margin of around one billion dollars.” He looked at Vice-President John.
“It’s a brilliant campaign.”

“It’s really just common sense,” John said. “But
here’s the thing, Hack: if people realize every mall in the country’s got
Mercurys, we’ll lose all that demand we’ve worked so hard to build up. Am I
right?”

The other John said, “Well, not everyone, obviously. We figure we only
have to plug... what did we decide? Five?”

“Ten,” Vice-President John said. “To be safe.”

“Right. We take out ten customers, make it look like ghetto kids, and
we’ve got street cred coming out our asses. I bet we shift our inventory within 24
hours.”

“I remember when you could always rely on those little street kids to
pop a few people for the latest Nikes,” Vice-President John said. “Now people
get mugged for Reeboks, for Adidas—for generics, for Christ’s sake.”

“The ghettos have no fashion sense any more,” the other John
said. “I swear, they’ll wear anything.”

“It’s a disgrace. Anyway, Hack, I think you get the point. This
is a groundbreaking campaign.”

“Talk about edgy,” the other John said. “This defines
edgy.”

“Um...” Hack said. He swallowed. “Isn’t this kind of...
illegal?”

“He wants to know if it’s illegal,” the John said, amused.
“You’re a funny guy, Hack. Yes, it’s illegal, killing people without their
consent, that’s very illegal.”

Vice-President John said, “But the question is: what does it cost us?
Even if we get found out, we burn a few million on legal fees, we get fined a few million
more... bottom-line, we’re still way out in front.”

Hack had a question he very much didn’t want to ask. “So... this
contract... what does it say I’ll do?”

The John beside him folded his hands. “Well, Hack, we’ve
explained our business plan. What we want you to do is...”